Australia has one of the lowest incidence of tuberculosis in the world. The crude annual notification rate for tuberculosis (TB) has remained stable at between 5 and 6 per 100,000 population since 1991. In 1999, there were a total of 1,159 TB notifications in Australia of which 1,117 were new TB cases, and 42 were relapsed cases. The corresponding annual notification rate for new and relapsed TB was 5.9 and 0.2 per 100,000 population respectively. People born overseas accounted for 83 per cent of the notified cases. TB notification rates remain highest among overseas-born residents from high prevalence countries, and indigenous Australians. The lowest rates of disease are in the non-indigenous, Australian born population and data from the l...
Migration is a key driver of tuberculosis (TB) in many low-incidence settings, with the majority of ...
OBJECTIVE: To describe the burden of and trends in paediatric tuberculosis (TB) in Australia between...
BACKGROUND: The risk of progression to tuberculosis (TB) disease is greatest soon after infection, y...
Since the inception of the National Mycobacterial Surveillance System (NMSS) in 1991, annual crude n...
Since the inception of the National Mycobacterial Surveillance System (NMSS) in 1991, annual crude n...
Since the inception of the National Mycobacterial Surveillance System (NMSS) in 1991, annual crude n...
The National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System received 1,076 tuberculosis (TB) notifications i...
Abstract: In 2018, the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System received 1,438 tuberculosis ...
Tuberculosis cases in Australian people have increased. Australia has for many decades experienced a...
Australia has one of the lowest incidences of tuberculosis (TB) in the world. The annual incidence r...
Australia is a low tuberculosis incidence country. In the setting of increasing migration, we aimed ...
Background: Few low-incidence countries are on track to achieve the ambitious target of reaching TB ...
In Australia, most cases of tuberculosis (TB) occur in migrants. To inform control strategies for th...
Background: The setting for this analysis is the low tuberculosis (TB) incidence state of New South ...
In 2006, the Australian Mycobacterium Reference Laboratory Network identified 905 bacteriologically ...
Migration is a key driver of tuberculosis (TB) in many low-incidence settings, with the majority of ...
OBJECTIVE: To describe the burden of and trends in paediatric tuberculosis (TB) in Australia between...
BACKGROUND: The risk of progression to tuberculosis (TB) disease is greatest soon after infection, y...
Since the inception of the National Mycobacterial Surveillance System (NMSS) in 1991, annual crude n...
Since the inception of the National Mycobacterial Surveillance System (NMSS) in 1991, annual crude n...
Since the inception of the National Mycobacterial Surveillance System (NMSS) in 1991, annual crude n...
The National Notifiable Disease Surveillance System received 1,076 tuberculosis (TB) notifications i...
Abstract: In 2018, the National Notifiable Diseases Surveillance System received 1,438 tuberculosis ...
Tuberculosis cases in Australian people have increased. Australia has for many decades experienced a...
Australia has one of the lowest incidences of tuberculosis (TB) in the world. The annual incidence r...
Australia is a low tuberculosis incidence country. In the setting of increasing migration, we aimed ...
Background: Few low-incidence countries are on track to achieve the ambitious target of reaching TB ...
In Australia, most cases of tuberculosis (TB) occur in migrants. To inform control strategies for th...
Background: The setting for this analysis is the low tuberculosis (TB) incidence state of New South ...
In 2006, the Australian Mycobacterium Reference Laboratory Network identified 905 bacteriologically ...
Migration is a key driver of tuberculosis (TB) in many low-incidence settings, with the majority of ...
OBJECTIVE: To describe the burden of and trends in paediatric tuberculosis (TB) in Australia between...
BACKGROUND: The risk of progression to tuberculosis (TB) disease is greatest soon after infection, y...